Received November 30,—Read December 21,
1837.
i. Induction an action of contiguous particles.
1161. The science of electricity
is in that state in which every part of it requires
experimental investigation; not merely for the discovery
of new effects, but what is just now of far more importance,
the development of the means by which the old effects
are produced, and the consequent more accurate determination
of the first principles of action of the most extraordinary
and universal power in nature:—and to those
philosophers who pursue the inquiry zealously yet
cautiously, combining experiment with analogy, suspicious
of their preconceived notions, paying more respect
to a fact than a theory, not too hasty to generalize,
and above all things, willing at every step to cross-examine
their own opinions, both by reasoning and experiment,
no branch of knowledge can afford so fine and ready
a field for discovery as this. Such is most abundantly
shown to be the case by the progress which electricity
has made in the last thirty years: Chemistry
and Magnetism have successively acknowledged its over-ruling
influence; and it is probable that every effect depending
upon the powers of inorganic matter, and perhaps most
of those related to vegetable and animal life, will
ultimately be found subordinate to it.
1162. Amongst the actions of
different kinds into which electricity has conventionally
been subdivided, there is, I think, none which excels,
or even equals in importance, that called Induction.
It is of the most general influence in electrical
phenomena, appearing to be concerned in every one
of them, and has in reality the character of a first,
essential, and fundamental principle. Its comprehension
is so important, that I think we cannot proceed much
further in the investigation of the laws of electricity
without a more thorough understanding of its nature;
how otherwise can we hope to comprehend the harmony
and even unity of action which doubtless governs electrical
excitement by friction, by chemical means, by heat,
by magnetic influence, by evaporation, and even by
the living being?
1163. In the long-continued course
of experimental inquiry in which I have been engaged,
this general result has pressed upon me constantly,
namely, the necessity of admitting two forces, or
two forms or directions of a force (516. 517.), combined
with the impossibility of separating these two forces
(or electricities) from each other, either in the phenomena
of statical electricity or those of the current.
In association with this, the impossibility under
any circumstances, as yet, of absolutely charging
matter of any kind with one or the other electricity
only, dwelt on my mind, and made me wish and search
for a clearer view than any that I was acquainted
with, of the way in which electrical powers and the
particles of matter are related; especially in inductive
actions, upon which almost all others appeared to
rest.
1164. When I discovered the general
fact that electrolytes refused to yield their elements
to a current when in the solid state, though they gave
them forth freely if in the liquid condition (380.
394. 402.), I thought I saw an opening to the elucidation
of inductive action, and the possible subjugation
of many dissimilar phenomena to one law. For let
the electrolyte be water, a plate of ice being coated
with platina foil on its two surfaces, and these coatings
connected with any continued source of the two electrical
powers, the ice will charge like a Leyden arrangement,
presenting a case of common induction, but no current
will pass. If the ice be liquefied, the induction
will fall to a certain degree, because a current can
now pass; but its passing is dependent upon a peculiar
molecular arrangement of the particles consistent
with the transfer of the elements of the electrolyte
in opposite directions, the degree of discharge and
the quantity of elements evolved being exactly proportioned
to each other (377. 783.). Whether the charging
of the metallic coating be effected by a powerful
electrical machine, a strong and large voltaic battery,
or a single pair of plates, makes no difference in
the principle, but only in the degree of action (360).
Common induction takes place in each case if the electrolyte
be solid, or if fluid, chemical action and decomposition
ensue, provided opposing actions do not interfere;
and it is of high importance occasionally thus to
compare effects in their extreme degrees, for the
purpose of enabling us to comprehend the nature of
an action in its weak state, which may be only sufficiently
evident to us in its stronger condition (451.).
As, therefore, in the electrolytic action, induction
appeared to be the first step, and decomposition
the second (the power of separating these steps
from each other by giving the solid or fluid condition
to the electrolyte being in our hands); as the induction
was the same in its nature as that through air, glass,
wax, &c. produced by any of the ordinary means; and
as the whole effect in the electrolyte appeared to
be an action of the particles thrown into a peculiar
or polarized state, I was led to suspect that common
induction itself was in all cases an action of
contiguous particles, and that electrical action
at a distance (i.e. ordinary inductive action) never
occurred except through the influence of the intervening
matter.
The word contiguous is perhaps
not the best that might have been used here and
elsewhere; for as particles do not touch each other
it is not strictly correct. I was induced to
employ it, because in its common acceptation it
enabled me to state the theory plainly and with facility.
By contiguous particles I mean those which are next.—De.
1165. The respect which I entertain
towards the names of Epinus, Cavendish, Poisson, and
other most eminent men, all of whose theories I believe
consider induction as an action at a distance and in
straight lines, long indisposed me to the view I have
just stated; and though I always watched for opportunities
to prove the opposite opinion, and made such experiments
occasionally as seemed to bear directly on the point,
as, for instance, the examination of electrolytes,
solid and fluid, whilst under induction by polarized
light (951. 955.), it is only of late, and by degrees,
that the extreme generality of the subject has urged
me still further to extend my experiments and publish
my view. At present I believe ordinary induction
in all cases to be an action of contiguous particles
consisting in a species of polarity, instead of being
an action of either particles or masses at sensible
distances; and if this be true, the distinction and
establishment of such a truth must be of the greatest
consequence to our further progress in the investigation
of the nature of electric forces. The linked condition
of electrical induction with chemical decomposition;
of voltaic excitement with chemical action; the transfer
of elements in an electrolyte; the original cause
of excitement in all cases; the nature and relation
of conduction and insulation of the direct and lateral
or transverse action constituting electricity and
magnetism; with many other things more or less incomprehensible
at present, would all be affected by it, and perhaps
receive a full explication in their reduction under
one general law.
1166. I searched for an unexceptionable
test of my view, not merely in the accordance of known
facts with it, but in the consequences which would
flow from it if true; especially in those which would
not be consistent with the theory of action at a distance.
Such a consequence seemed to me to present itself
in the direction in which inductive action could be
exerted. If in straight lines only, though not
perhaps decisive, it would be against my view; but
if in curved lines also, that would be a natural result
of the action of contiguous particles, but, as I think,
utterly incompatible with action at a distance, as
assumed by the received theories, which, according
to every fact and analogy we are acquainted with, is
always in straight lines.
1167. Again, if induction be
an action of contiguous particles, and also the first
step in the process of electrolyzation (1164. 919.),
there seemed reason to expect some particular relation
of it to the different kinds of matter through which
it would be exerted, or something equivalent to a
specific electric induction for different bodies,
which, if it existed, would unequivocally prove the
dependence of induction on the particles; and though
this, in the theory of Poisson and others, has never
been supposed to be the case, I was soon led to doubt
the received opinion, and have taken great pains in
subjecting this point to close experimental examination.
1168. Another ever-present question
on my mind has been, whether electricity has an actual
and independent existence as a fluid or fluids, or
was a mere power of matter, like what we conceive of
the attraction of gravitation. If determined
either way it would be an enormous advance in our
knowledge; and as having the most direct and influential
bearing on my notions, I have always sought for experiments
which would in any way tend to elucidate that great
inquiry. It was in attempts to prove the existence
of electricity separate from matter, by giving an independent
charge of either positive or negative power only,
to some one substance, and the utter failure of all
such attempts, whatever substance was used or whatever
means of exciting or evolving electricity were
employed, that first drove me to look upon induction
as an action of the particles of matter, each having
both forces developed in it in exactly equal
amount. It is this circumstance, in connection
with others, which makes me desirous of placing the
remarks on absolute charge first, in the order of proof
and argument, which I am about to adduce in favour
of my view, that electric induction is an action of
the contiguous particles of the insulating medium or
dielectric.
I use the word dielectric to
express that substance through or
across which the electric forces are acting.—De.
P ii. On the absolute charge of matter.
1169. Can matter, either conducting
or non-conducting, be charged with one electric force
independently of the other, in any degree, either in
a sensible or latent state?
1170. The beautiful experiments
of Coulomb upon the equality of action of conductors,
whatever their substance, and the residence of all
the electricity upon their surfaces, are sufficient,
if properly viewed, to prove that conductors cannot
be bodily charged; and as yet no means of communicating
electricity to a conductor so as to place its particles
in relation to one electricity, and not at the same
time to the other in exactly equal amount, has been
discovered.
1171. With regard to electrics
or non-conductors, the conclusion does not at first
seem so clear. They may easily be electrified
bodily, either by communication (1247.) or excitement;
but being so charged, every case in succession, when
examined, came out to be a case of induction, and not
of absolute charge. Thus, glass within conductors
could easily have parts not in contact with the conductor
brought into an excited state; but it was always found
that a portion of the inner surface of the conductor
was in an opposite and equivalent state, or that another
part of the glass itself was in an equally opposite
state, an inductive charge and not an absolute
charge having been acquired.
1172. Well-purified oil of turpentine,
which I find to be an excellent liquid insulator for
most purposes, was put into a metallic vessel, and,
being insulated, an endeavour was made to charge its
particles, sometimes by contact of the metal with
the electrical machine, and at others by a wire dipping
into the fluid within; but whatever the mode of communication,
no electricity of one kind only was retained by the
arrangement, except what appeared on the exterior
surface of the metal, that portion being present there
only by an inductive action through the air to the
surrounding conductors. When the oil of turpentine
was confined in glass vessels, there were at first
some appearances as if the fluid did receive an absolute
charge of electricity from the charging wire, but these
were quickly reduced to cases of common induction
jointly through the fluid, the glass, and the surrounding
air.
1173. I carried these experiments
on with air to a very great extent. I had a chamber
built, being a cube of twelve feet. A slight cubical
wooden frame was constructed, and copper wire passed
along and across it in various directions, so as to
make the sides a large net-work, and then all was
covered in with paper, placed in close connexion with
the wires, and supplied in every direction with bands
of tin foil, that the whole might be brought into
good metallic communication, and rendered a free conductor
in every part. This chamber was insulated in
the lecture-room of the Royal Institution; a glass
tube about six feet in length was passed through its
side, leaving about four feet within and two feet on
the outside, and through this a wire passed from the
large electrical machine (290.) to the air within.
By working the machine, the air in this chamber could
be brought into what is considered a highly electrified
state (being, in fact, the same state as that of the
air of a room in which a powerful machine is in operation),
and at the same time the outside of the insulated cube
was everywhere strongly charged. But putting
the chamber in communication with the perfect discharging
train described in a former series (292.), and working
the machine so as to bring the air within to its utmost
degree of charge if I quickly cut off the connexion
with the machine, and at the same moment or instantly
after insulated the cube, the air within had not the
least power to communicate a further charge to it.
If any portion of the air was electrified, as glass
or other insulators may be charged (1171.), it was
accompanied by a corresponding opposite action within
the cube, the whole effect being merely a case of
induction. Every attempt to charge air bodily
and independently with the least portion of either
electricity failed.
1174 I put a delicate gold-leaf electrometer
within the cube, and then charged the whole by an
outside communication, very strongly, for some
time together; but neither during the charge or after
the discharge did the electrometer or air within show
the least signs of electricity. I charged and
discharged the whole arrangement in various ways, but
in no case could I obtain the least indication of
an absolute charge; or of one by induction in which
the electricity of one kind had the smallest superiority
in quantity over the other. I went into the cube
and lived in it, and using lighted candles, electrometers,
and all other tests of electrical states, I could
not find the least influence upon them, or indication
of any thing particular given by them, though all
the time the outside of the cube was powerfully charged,
and large sparks and brushes were darting off from
every part of its outer surface. The conclusion
I have come to is, that non-conductors, as well as
conductors, have never yet had an absolute and independent
charge of one electricity communicated to them, and
that to all appearance such a state of matter is impossible.
1175. There is another view of
this question which may be taken under the supposition
of the existence of an electric fluid or fluids.
It may be impossible to have one fluid or state in
a free condition without its producing by induction
the other, and yet possible to have cases in which
an isolated portion of matter in one condition being
uncharged, shall, by a change of state, evolve one
electricity or the other: and though such evolved
electricity might immediately induce the opposite state
in its neighbourhood, yet the mere evolution of one
electricity without the other in the first instance,
would be a very important fact in the theories which
assume a fluid or fluids; these theories as I understand
them assigning not the slightest reason why such an
effect should not occur.
1176. But on searching for such
cases I cannot find one. Evolution by friction,
as is well known, gives both powers in equal proportion.
So does evolution by chemical action, notwithstanding
the great diversity of bodies which may be employed,
and the enormous quantity of electricity which can
in this manner be evolved (371. 376. 861. 868. 961.).
The more promising cases of change of state, whether
by evaporation, fusion, or the reverse processes,
still give both forms of the power in equal
proportion; and the cases of splitting of mica and
other crystals, the breaking of sulphur, &c., are
subject to the same law of limitation.
1177. As far as experiment has
proceeded, it appears, therefore, impossible either
to evolve or make disappear one electric force without
equal and corresponding change in the other.
It is also equally impossible experimentally to charge
a portion of matter with one electric force independently
of the other. Charge always implies induction,
for it can in no instance be effected without; and
also the presence of the two forms of power,
equally at the moment of the development and afterwards.
There is no absolute charge of matter with one
fluid; no latency of a single electricity. This
though a negative result is an exceedingly important
one, being probably the consequence of a natural impossibility,
which will become clear to us when we understand the
true condition and theory of the electric power.
1178. The preceding considerations
already point to the following conclusions: bodies
cannot be charged absolutely, but only relatively,
and by a principle which is the same with that of
induction. All charge is sustained
by induction. All phenomena of intensity
include the principle of induction. All excitation
is dependent on or directly related to induction.
All currents involve previous intensity and
therefore previous induction. INDUCTION appears
to be the essential function both the first development
and the consequent phenomena of electricity.
P iii. Electrometer and inductive apparatus employed.
1179. Leaving for a time the
further consideration of the preceding facts until
they can be collated with other results bearing directly
on the great question of the nature of induction,
I will now describe the apparatus I have had occasion
to use; and in proportion to the importance of the
principles sought to be established is the necessity
of doing this so clearly, as to leave no doubt of
the results behind.
1180. Electrometer.—The
measuring instrument I have employed has been the
torsion balance electrometer of Coulomb, constructed,
generally, according to his directions, but with
certain variations and additions, which I will briefly
describe. The lower part was a glass cylinder
eight inches in height and eight inches in diameter;
the tube for the torsion thread was seventeen inches
in length. The torsion thread itself was not of
metal, but glass, according to the excellent suggestion
of the late Dr. Ritchie. It was twenty inches
in length, and of such tenuity that when the shell-lac
lever and attached ball, &c. were connected with
it, they made about ten vibrations in a minute.
It would bear torsion through four revolutions or
1440 deg., and yet, when released, return accurately
to its position; probably it would have borne considerably
more than this without injury. The repelled ball
was of pith, gilt, and was 0.3 of an inch in diameter.
The horizontal stem or lever supporting it was of shell-lac,
according to Coulomb’s direction, the arm carrying
the ball being 2.4 inches long, and the other only
1.2 inches: to this was attached the vane, also
described by Coulomb, which I found to answer admirably
its purpose of quickly destroying vibrations.
That the inductive action within the electrometer
might be uniform in all positions of the repelled ball
and in all states of the apparatus, two bands of tin
foil, about an inch wide each, were attached to the
inner surface of the glass cylinder, going entirely
round it, at the distance of 0.4 of an inch from each
other, and at such a height that the intermediate
clear surface was in the same horizontal plane with
the lever and ball. These bands were connected
with each other and with the earth, and, being perfect
conductors, always exerted a uniform influence on
the electrified balls within, which the glass surface,
from its irregularity of condition at different times,
I found, did not. For the purpose of keeping
the air within the electrometer in a constant state
as to dryness, a glass dish, of such size as to enter
easily within the cylinder, had a layer of fused potash
placed within it, and this being covered with a disc
of fine wire-gauze to render its inductive action
uniform at all parts, was placed within the instrument
at the bottom and left there.
1181. The moveable ball used
to take and measure the portion of electricity under
examination, and which may be called the repelling,
or the carrier, ball, was of soft alder wood,
well and smoothly gilt. It was attached to a
fine shell-lac stem, and introduced through
a hole into the electrometer according to Coulomb’s
method: the stem was fixed at its upper end in
a block or vice, supported on three short feet; and
on the surface of the glass cover above was a plate
of lead with stops on it, so that when the carrier
ball was adjusted in its right position, with the vice
above bearing at the same time against these stops,
it was perfectly easy to bring away the carrier-ball
and restore it to its place again very accurately,
without any loss of time.
1182. It is quite necessary to
attend to certain precautions respecting these balls.
If of pith alone they are bad; for when very dry, that
substance is so imperfect a conductor that it neither
receives nor gives a charge freely, and so, after
contact with a charged conductor, it is liable to
be in an uncertain condition. Again, it is difficult
to turn pith so smooth as to leave the ball, even
when gilt, so free from irregularities of form, as
to retain its charge undiminished for a considerable
length of time. When, therefore, the balls are
finally prepared and gilt they should be examined;
and being electrified, unless they can hold their charge
with very little diminution for a considerable time,
and yet be discharged instantly and perfectly by the
touch of an uninsulated conductor, they should be
dismissed.
1183. It is, perhaps, unnecessary
to refer to the graduation of the instrument, further
than to explain how the observations were made.
On a circle or ring of paper on the outside of the
glass cylinder, fixed so as to cover the internal
lower ring of tinfoil, were marked four points corresponding
to angles of 90 deg.; four other points exactly
corresponding to these points being marked on the
upper ring of tinfoil within. By these and the
adjusting screws on which the whole instrument stands,
the glass torsion thread could be brought accurately
into the centre of the instrument and of the graduations
on it. From one of the four points on the exterior
of the cylinder a graduation of 90 deg. was set
off, and a corresponding graduation was placed upon
the upper tinfoil on the opposite side of the cylinder
within; and a dot being marked on that point of the
surface of the repelled ball nearest to the side of
the electrometer, it was easy, by observing the line
which this dot made with the lines of the two graduations
just referred to, to ascertain accurately the position
of the ball. The upper end of the glass thread
was attached, as in Coulomb’s original electrometer,
to an index, which had its appropriate graduated circle,
upon which the degree of torsion was ultimately to
be read off.
1184. After the levelling of
the instrument and adjustment of the glass thread,
the blocks which determine the place of the carrier
ball are to be regulated (1181.) so that, when
the carrier arrangement is placed against them, the
centre of the ball may be in the radius of the instrument
corresponding to 0 deg. on the lower graduation
or that on the side of the electrometer, and at the
same level and distance from the centre as the repelled
ball on the suspended torsion lever. Then
the torsion index is to be turned until the ball connected
with it (the repelled ball) is accurately at 30 deg.,
and finally the graduated arc belonging to the torsion
index is to be adjusted so as to bring 0 deg.
upon it to the index. This state of the instrument
was adopted as that which gave the most direct expression
of the experimental results, and in the form having
fewest variable errors; the angular distance of 30
deg. being always retained as the standard distance
to which the balls were in every case to be brought,
and the whole of the torsion being read off at once
on the graduated circle above. Under these circumstances
the distance of the balls from each other was not merely
the same in degree, but their position in the instrument,
and in relation to every part of it, was actually
the same every time that a measurement was made; so
that all irregularities arising from slight difference
of form and action in the instrument and the bodies
around were avoided. The only difference which
could occur in the position of anything within, consisted
in the deflexion of the torsion thread from a vertical
position, more or less, according to the force of
repulsion of the balls; but this was so slight as
to cause no interfering difference in the symmetry
of form within the instrument, and gave no error in
the amount of torsion force indicated on the graduation
above.
1185. Although the constant angular
distance of 30 deg. between the centres of the
balls was adopted, and found abundantly sensible, for
all ordinary purposes, yet the facility of rendering
the instrument far more sensible by diminishing this
distance was at perfect command; the results at different
distances being very easily compared with each other
either by experiment, or, as they are inversely as
the squares of the distances, by calculation.
1186. The Coulomb balance electrometer
requires experience to be understood; but I think
it a very valuable instrument in the hands of those
who will take pains by practice and attention to learn
the precautions needful in its use. Its insulating
condition varies with circumstances, and should be
examined before it is employed in experiments.
In an ordinary and fair condition, when the balls
were so electrified as to give a repulsive torsion
force of 100 deg. at the standard distance of
30 deg., it took nearly four hours to sink to
50 deg. at the same distance; the average loss
from 400 deg. to 300 deg. being at the rate
of 2 deg..7 per minute, from 300 deg. to
200 deg. of 1 deg..7 per minute, from 200
deg. to 100 deg. of 1 deg..3 per minute,
and from 100 deg. to 50 deg. of 0 deg..87
per minute. As a complete measurement by the instrument
may be made in much less than a minute, the amount
of loss in that time is but small, and can easily
be taken into account.
1187. The inductive apparatus.—My
object was to examine inductive action carefully when
taking place through different media, for which purpose
it was necessary to subject these media to it in exactly
similar circumstances, and in such quantities as should
suffice to eliminate any variations they might present.
The requisites of the apparatus to be constructed
were, therefore, that the inducing surfaces of the
conductors should have a constant form and state,
and be at a constant distance from each other; and
that either solids, fluids, or gases might be placed
and retained between these surfaces with readiness
and certainty, and for any length of time.
1188. The apparatus used may
be described in general terms as consisting of two
metallic spheres of unequal diameter, placed, the smaller
within the larger, and concentric with it; the interval
between the two being the space through which the
induction was to take place. A section of it is
given (Plate VII. fi.) on a scale of one-half:
a, a are the two halves of a brass sphere,
with an air-tight joint at b, like that of the
Magdeburg hemispheres, made perfectly flush and smooth
inside so as to present no irregularity; c
is a connecting piece by which the apparatus is joined
to a good stop-cock d, which is itself attached
either to the metallic foot e, or to an air-pump.
The aperture within the hemisphere at f is
very small: g is a brass collar fitted
to the upper hemisphere, through which the shell-lac
support of the inner ball and its stem passes;
h is the inner ball, also of brass; it screws
on to a brass stem i, terminated above by a
brass ball B, l, l is a mass of shell-lac,
moulded carefully on to i, and serving both
to support and insulate it and its balls h,
B. The shell-lac stem l is fitted
into the socket g, by a little ordinary resinous
cement, more fusible than shell-lac, applied at
mm in such a way as to give sufficient strength
and render the apparatus air-tight there, yet leave
as much as possible of the lower part of the shell-lac
stem untouched, as an insulation between the ball
h and the surrounding sphere a, a.
The ball h has a small aperture at n,
so that when the apparatus is exhausted of one gas
and filled with another, the ball h may itself
also be exhausted and filled, that no variation of
the gas in the interval o may occur during the
course of an experiment.
1189. It will be unnecessary
to give the dimensions of all the parts, since the
drawing is to a scale of one-half: the inner ball
has a diameter 2.33 inches, and the surrounding sphere
an internal diameter of 3.57 inches. Hence the
width of the intervening space, through which the induction
is to take place, is 0.62 of an inch; and the extent
of this place or plate, i.e. the surface of a
medium sphere, may be taken as twenty-seven square
inches, a quantity considered as sufficiently large
for the comparison of different substances. Great
care was taken in finishing well the inducing surfaces
of the ball h and sphere a, a; and no
varnish or lacquer was applied to them, or to any
part of the metal of the apparatus.
1190. The attachment and adjustment
of the shell-lac stem was a matter requiring
considerable care, especially as, in consequence of
its cracking, it had frequently to be renewed.
The best lac was chosen and applied to the wire
i, so as to be in good contact with it everywhere,
and in perfect continuity throughout its own mass.
It was not smaller than is given by scale in the drawing,
for when less it frequently cracked within a few hours
after it was cold. I think that very slow cooling
or annealing improved its quality in this respect.
The collar g was made as thin as could be,
that the lac might be as wide there as possible.
In order that at every re-attachment of the stem to
the upper hemisphere the ball h might have
the same relative position, a gauge p (fi.) was made of wood, and this being applied to
the ball and hemisphere whilst the cement at m
was still soft, the bearings of the ball at qq,
and the hemisphere at rr, were forced home,
and the whole left until cold. Thus all difficulty
in the adjustment of the ball in the sphere was avoided.
1191. I had occasion at first
to attach the stem to the socket by other means, as
a band of paper or a plugging of white silk thread;
but these were very inferior to the cement, interfering
much with the insulating power of the apparatus.
1192. The retentive power of
this apparatus was, when in good condition, better
than that of the electrometer (1186.), i.e. the
proportion of loss of power was less. Thus when
the apparatus was electrified, and also the balls
in the electrometer, to such a degree, that after the
inner ball had been in contact with the top k
of the ball of the apparatus, it caused a repulsion
indicated by 600 deg. of torsion force, then in
falling from 600 deg. to 400 deg. the average
loss was 8 deg..6 per minute; from 400 deg.
to 300 deg. the average loss was 2 deg..6
per minute; from 300 deg. to 200 deg. it
was 1 deg..7 per minute; from 200 deg. to
170 deg. it was 1 deg. per minute. This
was after the apparatus had been charged for a short
time; at the first instant of charging there is an
apparent loss of electricity, which can only be comprehended
hereafter (1207. 1250.).
1193. When the apparatus loses
its insulating power suddenly, it is almost always
from a crack near to or within the brass socket.
These cracks are usually transverse to the stem.
If they occur at the part attached by common cement
to the socket, the air cannot enter, and thus constituting
vacua, they conduct away the electricity and lower
the charge, as fast almost as if a piece of metal
had been introduced there. Occasionally stems
in this state, being taken out and cleared from the
common cement, may, by the careful application of
the heat of a spirit-lamp, be so far softened and
melted as to restore the perfect continuity of the
parts; but if that does not succeed in replacing things
in a good condition, the remedy is a new shell-lac
stem.
1194. The apparatus when in order
could easily be exhausted of air and filled with any
given gas; but when that gas was acid or alkaline,
it could not properly be removed by the air-pump,
and yet required to be perfectly cleared away.
In such cases the apparatus was opened and emptied
of gas; and with respect to the inner ball h,
it was washed out two or three times with distilled
water introduced at the screw-hole, and then being
heated above 212 deg., air was blown through to
render the interior perfectly dry.
1195. The inductive apparatus
described is evidently a Leyden phial, with the advantage,
however, of having the dielectric or insulating
medium changed at pleasure. The balls h
and B, with the connecting wire i, constitute
the charged conductor, upon the surface of which all
the electric force is resident by virtue of induction
(1178.). Now though the largest portion of this
induction is between the ball h and the surrounding
sphere aa, yet the wire i and the ball
B determine a part of the induction from their surfaces
towards the external surrounding conductors.
Still, as all things in that respect remain the same,
whilst the medium within at oo, may be varied,
any changes exhibited by the whole apparatus will
in such cases depend upon the variations made in the
interior; and these were the changes I was in search
of, the negation or establishment of such differences
being the great object of my inquiry. I considered
that these differences, if they existed, would be most
distinctly set forth by having two apparatus of the
kind described, precisely similar in every respect;
and then, different insulating media being
within, to charge one and measure it, and after dividing
the charge with the other, to observe what the ultimate
conditions of both were. If insulating media
really had any specific differences in favouring or
opposing inductive action through them, such differences,
I conceived, could not fail of being developed by
such a process.
1196. I will wind up this description
of the apparatus, and explain the precautions necessary
to their use, by describing the form and order of the
experiments made to prove their equality when both
contained common air. In order to facilitate
reference I will distinguish the two by the terms App.
i. and App. ii.
1197. The electrometer is first
to be adjusted and examined (1184.), and the app.
i. and ii. are to be perfectly discharged. A Leyden
phial is to be charged to such a degree that it would
give a spark of about one-sixteenth or one-twentieth
of an inch in length between two balls of half an inch
diameter; and the carrier ball of the electrometer
being charged by this phial, is to be introduced into
the electrometer, and the lever ball brought by the
motion of the torsion index against it; the charge
is thus divided between the balls, and repulsion ensues.
It is useful then to bring the repelled ball to the
standard distance of 30 deg. by the motion of
the torsion index, and observe the force in degrees
required for this purpose; this force will in future
experiments be called repulsion of the balls.
1198. One of the inductive apparatus,
as, for instance, app. i., is now to be charged from
the Leyden phial, the latter being in the state it
was in when used to charge the balls; the carrier
ball is to be brought into contact with the top of
its upper ball (k, fi.), then introduced
into the electrometer, and the repulsive force (at
the distance of 30 deg.) measured. Again,
the carrier should be applied to the app. i. and the
measurement repeated; the apparatus i. and ii. are
then to be joined, so as to divide the charge,
and afterwards the force of each measured by the carrier
ball, applied as before, and the results carefully
noted. After this both i. and ii. are to be discharged;
then app. ii. charged, measured, divided with app.
i., and the force of each again measured and noted.
If in each case the half charges of app. i. and ii.
are equal, and are together equal to the whole charge
before division, then it may be considered as proved
that the two apparatus are precisely equal in power,
and fit to be used in cases of comparison between
different insulating media or dielectrics.
1199. But the precautions
necessary to obtain accurate results are numerous.
The apparatus i. and ii. must always be placed on a
thoroughly uninsulating medium. A mahogany table,
for instance, is far from satisfactory in this respect,
and therefore a sheet of tinfoil, connected with an
extensive discharging train (292.), is what I have
used. They must be so placed also as not to be
too near each other, and yet equally exposed to the
inductive influence of surrounding objects; and these
objects, again, should not be disturbed in their position
during an experiment, or else variations of induction
upon the external ball B of the apparatus may occur,
and so errors be introduced into the results.
The carrier ball, when receiving its portion of electricity
from the apparatus, should always be applied at the
same part of the ball, as, for instance, the summit
k, and always in the same way; variable induction
from the vicinity of the head, hands, &c. being avoided,
and the ball after contact being withdrawn upwards
in a regular and constant manner.
1200. As the stem had occasionally
to be changed (1190.), and the change might occasion
slight variations in the position of the ball within,
I made such a variation purposely, to the amount of
an eighth of an inch (which is far more than ever
could occur in practice), but did not find that it
sensibly altered the relation of the apparatus, or
its inductive condition as a whole. Another
trial of the apparatus was made as to the effect of
dampness in the air, one being filled with very dry
air, and the other with air from over water.
Though this produced no change in the result, except
an occasional tendency to more rapid dissipation, yet
the precaution was always taken when working with
gases (1290.) to dry them perfectly.
1201. It is essential that the
interior of the apparatus should be perfectly free
from dust or small loose particles, for these
very rapidly lower the charge and interfere on occasions
when their presence and action would hardly be expected.
To breathe on the interior of the apparatus and wipe
it out quietly with a clean silk handkerchief, is an
effectual way of removing them; but then the intrusion
of other particles should be carefully guarded against,
and a dusty atmosphere should for this and several
other reasons be avoided.
1202. The shell-lac stem
requires occasionally to be well-wiped, to remove,
in the first instance, the film of wax and adhering
matter which is upon it; and afterwards to displace
dirt and dust which will gradually attach to it in
the course of experiments. I have found much to
depend upon this precaution, and a silk handkerchief
is the best wiper.
1203. But wiping and some other
circumstances tend to give a charge to the surface
of the shell-lac stem. This should be
removed, for, if allowed to remain, it very seriously
affects the degree of charge given to the carrier
ball by the apparatus (1232.). This condition
of the stem is best observed by discharging the apparatus,
applying the carrier ball to the stem, touching it
with the finger, insulating and removing it, and examining
whether it has received any charge (by induction) from
the stem; if it has, the stem itself is in a charged
state. The best method of removing the charge
I have found to be, to cover the finger with a single
fold of a silk handkerchief, and breathing on the
stem, to wipe it immediately after with the finger;
the ball B and its connected wire, &c. being at the
same time uninsulated: the wiping place
of the silk must not be changed; it then becomes sufficiently
damp not to excite the stem, and is yet dry enough
to leave it in a clean and excellent insulating condition.
If the air be dusty, it will be found that a single
charge of the apparatus will bring on an electric
state of the outside of the stem, in consequence of
the carrying power of the particles of dust; whereas
in the morning, and in a room which has been left
quiet, several experiments can be made in succession
without the stem assuming the least degree of charge.
1204. Experiments should not
be made by candle or lamp light except with much care,
for flames have great and yet unsteady powers of affecting
and dissipating electrical charges.
1205. As a final observation
on the state of the apparatus, they should retain
their charges well and uniformly, and alike for both,
and at the same time allow of a perfect and instantaneous
discharge, giving afterwards no charge to the carrier
ball, whatever part of the ball B it may be applied
to (1218.).
1206. With respect to the balance
electrometer, all the precautions that need be mentioned,
are, that the carrier ball is to be preserved during
the first part of an experiment in its electrified
state, the loss of electricity which would follow
upon its discharge being avoided; and that in introducing
it into the electrometer through the hole in the glass
plate above, care should be taken that it do not touch,
or even come near to, the edge of the glass.
1207. When the whole charge in
one apparatus is divided between the two, the gradual
fall, apparently from dissipation, in the apparatus
which has received the half charge is greater
than in the one originally charged. This
is due to a peculiar effect to be described hereafter
(1250. 1251.), the interfering influence of which
may be avoided to a great extent by going through
the steps of the process regularly and quickly; therefore,
after the original charge has been measured, in app.
i. for instance, i. and ii. are to be symmetrically
joined by their balls B, the carrier touching one
of these balls at the same time; it is first to be
removed, and then the apparatus separated from each
other; app. ii. is next quickly to be measured by
the carrier, then app. i.; lastly, ii. is to be discharged,
and the discharged carrier applied to it to ascertain
whether any residual effect is present (1205.), and
app. i. being discharged is also to be examined in
the same manner and for the same purpose.
1208. The following is an example
of the division of a charge by the two apparatus,
air being the dielectric in both of them. The
observations are set down one under the other in the
order in which they were taken, the left-hand numbers
representing the observations made on app. i., and
the right-hand numbers those on app. ii. App.
i. is that which was originally charged, and after
two measurements, the charge was divided with app.
ii.
1209. Without endeavouring to
allow for the loss which must have been gradually
going on during the time of the experiment, let us
observe the results of the numbers as they stand.
As 1 deg. remained in app. i. in an undischargeable
state, 249 deg. may be taken as the utmost amount
of the transferable or divisible charge, the half
of which is 124 deg..5. As app. ii. was
free of charge in the first instance, and immediately
after the division was found with 122 deg., this
amount at least may be taken as what it had
received. On the other hand 124 deg. minus
1 deg., or 123 deg., may be taken as the
half of the transferable charge retained by app. i.
Now these do not differ much from each other, or from
124 deg..5, the half of the full amount of transferable
charge; and when the gradual loss of charge evident
in the difference between 254 deg. and 250 deg.
of app. i. is also taken into account, there is every
reason to admit the result as showing an equal division
of charge, unattended by any disappearance of power
except that due to dissipation.
1210. I will give another result,
in which app. ii. was first charged, and where the
residual action of that apparatus was greater than
in the former case.
A1211. The transferable charge
being 148 deg. 5 deg., its half is
71 deg..5, which is not far removed from 70 deg.,
the half charge of i.; or from 73 deg., the half
charge of ii.: these half charges again making
up the sum of 143 deg., or just the amount of
the whole transferable charge. Considering the
errors of experiment, therefore, these results may
again be received as showing that the apparatus were
equal in inductive capacity, or in their powers of
receiving charges.
1212. The experiments were repeated
with charges of negative electricity with the same
general results.
1213. That I might be sure of
the sensibility and action of the apparatus, I made
such a change in one as ought upon principle to increase
its inductive force, i.e. I put a metallic
lining into the lower hemisphere of app. i., so as
to diminish the thickness of the intervening air in
that part, from 0.62 to 0.435 of an inch: this
lining was carefully shaped and rounded so that it
should not present a sudden projection within at its
edge, but a gradual transition from the reduced interval
in the lower part of the sphere to the larger one
in the upper.
1214. This change immediately
caused app. i. to produce effects indicating that
it had a greater aptness or capacity for induction
than app. ii. Thus, when a transferable charge
in app. ii. of 469 deg. was divided with app.
i., the former retained a charge of 225 deg.,
whilst the latter showed one of 227 deg., i.e.
the former had lost 244 deg. in communicating
227 deg. to the latter: on the other hand,
when app. i. had a transferable charge in it of 381
deg. divided by contact with app. ii., it lost
181 deg. only, whilst it gave to app. ii. as
many as 194:—the sum of the divided forces
being in the first instance less, and in the
second instance greater than the original undivided
charge. These results are the more striking, as
only one-half of the interior of app. i. was modified,
and they show that the instruments are capable of
bringing out differences in inductive force from amongst
the errors of experiment, when these differences are
much less than that produced by the alteration made
in the present instance.
iv. Induction in curved lines.
1215. Amongst those results deduced
from the molecular view of induction (1166.), which,
being of a peculiar nature, are the best tests of the
truth or error of the theory, the expected action
in curved lines is, I think, the most important at
present; for, if shown to take place in an unexceptionable
manner, I do not see how the old theory of action at
a distance and in straight lines can stand, or how
the conclusion that ordinary induction is an action
of contiguous particles can be resisted.
1216. There are many forms of
old experiments which might be quoted as favourable
to, and consistent with the view I have adopted.
Such are most cases of electro-chemical decomposition,
electrical brushes, auras, sparks, &c.; but as these
might be considered equivocal evidence, inasmuch as
they include a current and discharge, (though they
have long been to me indications of prior molecular
action (1230.)) I endeavoured to devise such experiments
for first proofs as should not include transfer, but
relate altogether to the pure simple inductive action
of statical electricity.
1217. It was also of importance
to make these experiments in the simplest possible
manner, using not more than one insulating medium or
dielectric at a time, lest differences of slow conduction
should produce effects which might erroneously be
supposed to result from induction in curved lines.
It will be unnecessary to describe the steps of the
investigation minutely; I will at once proceed to
the simplest mode of proving the facts, first in air
and then in other insulating media.
1218. A cylinder of solid shell-lac,
0.9 of an inch in diameter and seven inches in length,
was fixed upright in a wooden foot (fi.):
it was made concave or cupped at its upper extremity
so that a brass ball or other small arrangement could
stand upon it. The upper half of the stem having
been excited negatively by friction with warm
flannel, a brass ball, B, 1 inch in diameter, was
placed on the top, and then the whole arrangement
examined by the carrier ball and Coulomb’s electrometer
(1180. &c.). For this purpose the balls of the
electrometer were charged positively to about
360 deg., and then the carrier being applied to
various parts of the ball B, the two were uninsulated
whilst in contact or in position, then insulated,
separated, and the charge of the carrier examined as
to its nature and force. Its electricity was
always positive, and its force at the different positions
a, b, c, d, &c. (fig. and 107.) observed
in succession, was as follows:
It can hardly be necessary for me
to say here, that whatever general state the carrier
ball acquired in any place where it was uninsulated
and then insulated, it retained on removal from that
place, notwithstanding that it might pass through
other places that would have given to it, if uninsulated,
a different condition.
1219. To comprehend the full
force of these results, it must first be understood,
that all the charges of the ball B and the carrier
are charges by induction, from the action of the excited
surface of the shell-lac cylinder; for whatever
electricity the ball B received by communication
from the shell-lac, either in the first instance
or afterwards, was removed by the uninsulating contacts,
only that due to induction remaining; and this is
shown by the charges taken from the ball in this its
uninsulated state being always positive, or of the
contrary character to the electricity of the shell-lac.
In the next place, the charges at a, c,
and d were of such a nature as might be expected
from an inductive action in straight lines, but that
obtained at b is not so: it is clearly
a charge by induction, but induction in a
curved line; for the carrier ball whilst applied
to b, and after its removal to a distance of
six inches or more from B, could not, in consequence
of the size of B, be connected by a straight line
with any part of the excited and inducing shell-lac.
1220. To suppose that the upper
part of the uninsulated ball B, should in some
way be retained in an electrified state by that portion
of the surface of the ball which is in sight of the
shell-lac, would be in opposition to what we
know already of the subject. Electricity is retained
upon the surface of conductors only by induction (1178.);
and though some persons may not be prepared as yet
to admit this with respect to insulated conductors,
all will as regards uninsulated conductors like the
ball B; and to decide the matter we have only to place
the carrier ball at e (fi.), so that
it shall not come in contact with B, uninsulate it
by a metallic rod descending perpendicularly, insulate
it, remove it, and examine its state; it will be found
charged with the same kind of electricity as, and
even to a higher degree (1224.) than, if it
had been in contact with the summit of B.
1221. To suppose, again, that
induction acts in some way through or across
the metal of the ball, is negatived by the simplest
considerations; but a fact in proof will be better.
If instead of the ball B a small disc of metal be
used, the carrier may be charged at, or above the middle
of its upper surface: but if the plate be enlarged
to about 1-1/2 or 2 inches in diameter, C (fi.),
then no charge will be given to the carrier at f,
though when applied nearer to the edge at g,
or even above the middle at h, a charge
will be obtained; and this is true though the plate
may be a mere thin film of gold-leaf. Hence it
is clear that the induction is not through
the metal, but through the surrounding air or dielectric,
and that in curved lines.
1222. I had another arrangement,
in which a wire passing downwards through the middle
of the shell-lac cylinder to the earth, was connected
with the ball B (fi.) so as to keep it in a
constantly uninsulated state. This was a very
convenient form of apparatus, and the results with
it were the same as those just described.
1223. In another case the ball
B was supported by a shell-lac stem, independently
of the excited cylinder of shell-lac, and at half
an inch distance from it; but the effects were the
same. Then the brass ball of a charged Leyden
jar was used in place of the excited shell-lac
to produce induction; but this caused no alteration
of the phenomena. Both positive and negative
inducing charges were tried with the same general results.
Finally, the arrangement was inverted in the air for
the purpose of removing every possible objection to
the conclusions, but they came out exactly the same.
1224. Some results obtained with
a brass hemisphere instead of the ball B were exceedingly
interesting, It was 1.36 of an inch in diameter, (fi.), and being placed on the top of the excited shell-lac
cylinder, the carrier ball was applied, as in the
former experiments (1218.), at the respective positions
delineated in the figure. At i the force
was 112 deg., at k 108 deg., at l
65 deg., at m 35 deg.; the inductive
force gradually diminishing, as might have been expected,
to this point. But on raising the carrier to
the position n, the charge increased to 87 deg.;
and on raising it still higher to o, the charge
still further increased to 105 deg.: at a
higher point still, p, the charge taken was
smaller in amount, being 98 deg., and continued
to diminish for more elevated positions. Here
the induction fairly turned a corner. Nothing,
in fact, can better show both the curved lines or
courses of the inductive action, disturbed as they
are from their rectilineal form by the shape, position,
and condition of the metallic hemisphere; and also
a lateral tension, so to speak, of these lines
on one another:—all depending, as I conceive,
on induction being an action of the contiguous particles
of the dielectric, which being thrown into a state
of polarity and tension, are in mutual relation by
their forces in all directions.
1225. As another proof that the
whole of these actions were inductive I may state
a result which was exactly what might be expected,
namely, that if uninsulated conducting matter was
brought round and near to the excited shell-lac
stem, then the inductive force was directed towards
it, and could not be found on the top of the hemisphere.
Removing this matter the lines of force resumed their
former direction. The experiment affords proofs
of the lateral tension of these lines, and supplies
a warning to remove such matter in repeating the above
investigation.
1226. After these results on
curved inductive action in air I extended the experiments
to other gases, using first carbonic acid and then
hydrogen: the phenomena were precisely those
already described. In these experiments I found
that if the gases were confined in vessels they required
to be very large, for whether of glass or earthenware,
the conducting power of such materials is so great
that the induction of the excited shell-lac cylinder
towards them is as much as if they were metal; and
if the vessels be small, so great a portion of the
inductive force is determined towards them that the
lateral tension or mutual repulsion of the lines of
force before spoken of, (1224.) by which their inflexion
is caused, is so much relieved in other directions,
that no inductive charge will be given to the carrier
ball in the positions k, l, m, n, o, p (fi.). A very good mode of making the experiment
is to let large currents of the gases ascend or descend
through the air, and carry on the experiments in these
currents.
1227. These experiments were
then varied by the substitution of a liquid dielectric,
namely, oil of turpentine, in place of air and
gases. A dish of thin glass well-covered with
a film of shell-lac (1272.), which was found
by trial to insulate well, had some highly rectified
oil of turpentine put into it to the depth of half
an inch, and being then placed upon the top of the
brass hemisphere (fi.), observations were made
with the carrier ball as before (1224.). The results
were the same, and the circumstance of some of the
positions being within the fluid and some without,
made no sensible difference.
1228. Lastly, I used a few solid
dielectrics for the same purpose, and with the same
results. These were shell-lac, sulphur,
fused and cast borate of lead, flint glass well-covered
with a film of lac, and spermaceti. The
following was the form of experiment with sulphur,
and all were of the same kind. A square plate
of the substance, two inches in extent and 0.6 of an
inch in thickness, was cast with a small hole or depression
in the middle of one surface to receive the carrier
ball. This was placed upon the surface of the
metal hemisphere (fi.) arranged on the excited
lac as in former cases, and observations were
made at n, o, p, and q. Great care
was required in these experiments to free the sulphur
or other solid substance from any charge it might
previously have received. This was done by breathing
and wiping (1203.), and the substance being found free
from all electrical excitement, was then used in the
experiment; after which it was removed and again examined,
to ascertain that it had received no charge, but had
acted really as a dielectric. With all these precautions
the results were the same: and it is thus very
satisfactory to obtain the curved inductive action
through solid bodies, as any possible effect
from the translation of charged particles in fluids
or gases, which some persons might imagine to be the
case, is here entirely negatived.
1229. In these experiments with
solid dielectrics, the degree of charge assumed by
the carrier ball at the situations n, o, p (fi.), was decidedly greater than that given to the
ball at the same places when air only intervened between
it and the metal hemisphere. This effect is consistent
with what will hereafter be found to be the respective
relations of these bodies, as to their power of facilitating
induction through them (1269. 1273. 1277.).
1230. I might quote many
other forms of experiment, some old and some new,
in which induction in curved or contorted lines takes
place, but think it unnecessary after the preceding
results; I shall therefore mention but two. If
a conductor A, (fi.) be electrified, and an uninsulated
metallic ball B, or even a plate, provided the edges
be not too thin, be held before it, a small electrometer
at c or at d, uninsulated, will give
signs of electricity, opposite in its nature to that
of A, and therefore caused by induction, although
the influencing and influenced bodies cannot be joined
by a right line passing through the air. Or if,
the electrometers being removed, a point be fixed
at the back of the ball in its uninsulated state as
at C, this point will become luminous and discharge
the conductor A. The latter experiment is described
by Nicholson, who, however, reasons erroneously
upon it. As to its introduction here, though
it is a case of discharge, the discharge is preceded
by induction, and that induction must be in curved
lines.
1231. As argument against the
received theory of induction and in favour of that
which I have ventured to put forth, I cannot see how
the preceding results can be avoided. The effects
are clearly inductive effects produced by electricity,
not in currents but in its statical state, and this
induction is exerted in lines of force which, though
in many experiments they may be straight, are here
curved more or less according to circumstances.
I use the term line of inductive force merely
as a temporary conventional mode of expressing the
direction of the power in cases of induction; and
in the experiments with the hemisphere (1224.), it
is curious to see how, when certain lines have terminated
on the under surface and edge of the metal, those
which were before lateral to them expand and open
out from each other, some bending round and terminating
their action on the upper surface of the hemisphere,
and others meeting, as it were, above in their progress
outwards, uniting their forces to give an increased
charge to the carrier ball, at an increased distance
from the source of power, and influencing each other
so as to cause a second flexure in the contrary direction
from the first one. All this appears to me to
prove that the whole action is one of contiguous particles,
related to each other, not merely in the lines which
they may be conceived to form through the dielectric,
between the inductric and the inducteous
surfaces (1483.), but in other lateral directions
also. It is this which gives an effect equivalent
to a lateral repulsion or expansion in the lines of
force I have spoken of, and enables induction to turn
a corner (1304.). The power, instead of being
like that of gravity, which causes particles to act
on each other through straight lines, whatever other
particles may be between them, is more analogous to
that of a series of magnetic needles, or to the condition
of the particles considered as forming the whole of
a straight or a curved magnet. So that in whatever
way I view it, and with great suspicion of the influence
of favourite notions over myself, I cannot perceive
how the ordinary theory applied to explain induction
can be a correct representation of that great natural
principle of electrical action.
1232. I have had occasion in
describing the precautions necessary in the use of
the inductive apparatus, to refer to one founded on
induction in curved lines (1203.); and after the experiments
already described, it will easily be seen how great
an influence the shell-lac stem may exert
upon the charge of the carrier ball when applied to
the apparatus (1218.), unless that precaution be attended
to.
1233. I think it expedient, next
in the course of these experimental researches, to
describe some effects due to conduction, obtained
with such bodies as glass, lac, sulphur,
&c., which had not been anticipated. Being understood,
they will make us acquainted with certain precautions
necessary in investigating the great question of specific
inductive capacity.
1234. One of the inductive apparatus
already described (1187, &c.) had a hemispherical
cup of shell-lac introduced, which being in the
interval between the inner bull and the lower hemisphere,
nearly occupied the space there; consequently when
the apparatus was charged, the lac was the dielectric
or insulating medium through which the induction took
place in that part. When this apparatus was first
charged with electricity (1198.) up to a certain intensity,
as 400 deg., measured by the COULOMB’S electrometer
(1180.), it sank much faster from that degree than
if it had been previously charged to a higher point,
and had gradually fallen to 400 deg.; or than
it would do if the charge were, by a second application,
raised up again to 400 deg.; all other things
remaining the same. Again, if after having been
charged for some time, as fifteen or twenty minutes,
it was suddenly and perfectly discharged, even the
stem having all electricity removed from it (1203.),
then the apparatus being left to itself, would gradually
recover a charge, which in nine or ten minutes would
rise up to 50 deg. or 60 deg., and in one
instance to 80 deg..
1235. The electricity, which
in these cases returned from an apparently latent
to a sensible state, was always of the same kind as
that which had been given by the charge. The
return took place at both the inducing surfaces; for
if after the perfect discharge of the apparatus the
whole was insulated, as the inner ball resumed a positive
state the outer sphere acquired a negative condition.
1236. This effect was at once
distinguished from that produced by the excited stem
acting in curved lines of induction (1203. 1232.),
by the circumstance that all the returned electricity
could be perfectly and instantly discharged.
It appeared to depend upon the shell-lac within,
and to be, in some way, due to electricity evolved
from it in consequence of a previous condition into
which it had been brought by the charge of the metallic
coatings or balls.
1237. To examine this state more
accurately, the apparatus, with the hemispherical
cup of shell-lac in it, was charged for about
forty-five minutes to above 600 deg. with positive
electricity at the balls h and B. (fi.)
above and within. It was then discharged, opened,
the shell-lac taken out, and its state examined;
this was done by bringing the carrier ball near the
shell-lac, uninsulating it, insulating it, and
then observing what charge it had acquired. As
it would be a charge by induction, the state of the
ball would indicate the opposite state of electricity
in that surface of the shell-lac which had produced
it. At first the lac appeared quite free
from any charge; but gradually its two surfaces assumed
opposite states of electricity, the concave surface,
which had been next the inner and positive ball; assuming
a positive state, and the convex surface, which had
been in contact with the negative coating, acquiring
a negative state; these states gradually increased
in intensity for some time.
1238. As the return action was
evidently greatest instantly after the discharge,
I again put the apparatus together, and charged it
for fifteen minutes as before, the inner ball positively.
I then discharged it, instantly removing the upper
hemisphere with the interior ball, and, leaving the
shell-lac cup in the lower uninsulated hemisphere,
examined its inner surface by the carrier ball as
before (1237.). In this way I found the surface
of the shell-lac actually negative, or
in the reverse state to the ball which had been in
it; this state quickly disappeared, and was succeeded
by a positive condition, gradually increasing in intensity
for some time, in the same manner as before.
The first negative condition of the surface opposite
the positive charging ball is a natural consequence
of the state of things, the charging ball being in
contact with the shell-lac only in a few points.
It does not interfere with the general result and
peculiar state now under consideration, except that
it assists in illustrating in a very marked manner
the ultimate assumption by the surfaces of the shell-lac
of an electrified condition, similar to that of the
metallic surfaces opposed to or against them.
1239. Glass was then examined
with respect to its power of assuming this peculiar
state. I had a thick flint-glass hemispherical
cup formed, which would fit easily into the space
o of the lower hemisphere (1188. 1189.); it
had been heated and varnished with a solution of shell-lac
in alcohol, for the purpose of destroying the conducting
power of the vitreous surface (1254.). Being
then well-warmed and experimented with, I found it
could also assume the same state, but not apparently
to the same degree, the return action amounting in
different cases to quantities from 6 deg. to 18
deg..
1240. Spermaceti experimented
with in the same manner gave striking results.
When the original charge had been sustained for fifteen
or twenty minutes at about 500 deg., the return
charge was equal to 95 deg. or 100 deg.,
and was about fourteen minutes arriving at the maximum
effect. A charge continued for not more than
two or three seconds was here succeeded by a return
charge of 50 deg. or 60 deg.. The observations
formerly made (1234.) held good with this substance.
Spermaceti, though it will insulate a low charge for
some time, is a better conductor than shell-lac,
glass, and sulphur; and this conducting power
is connected with the readiness with which it exhibits
the particular effect under consideration.
1241. Sulphur.—I
was anxious to obtain the amount of effect with this
substance, first, because it is an excellent insulator,
and in that respect would illustrate the relation
of the effect to the degree of conducting power possessed
by the dielectric (1247.); and in the next place, that
I might obtain that body giving the smallest degree
of the effect now under consideration for the investigation
of the question of specific inductive capacity (1277.).
1242. With a good hemispherical
cup of sulphur cast solid and sound, I obtained the
return charge, but only to an amount of 17 deg.
or 18 deg.. Thus glass and sulphur, which
are bodily very bad conductors of electricity, and
indeed almost perfect insulators, gave very little
of this return charge.
1243. I tried the same experiment
having air only in the inductive apparatus.
After a continued high charge for some time I could
obtain a little effect of return action, but it was
ultimately traced to the shell-lac of the stem.
1244. I sought to produce something
like this state with one electric power and without
induction; for upon the theory of an electric fluid
or fluids, that did not seem impossible, and then
I should have obtained an absolute charge (1169. 1177.),
or something equivalent to it. In this I could
not succeed. I excited the outside of a cylinder
of shell-lac very highly for some time, and then
quickly discharging it (1203.), waited and watched
whether any return charge would appear, but such was
not the case. This is another fact in favour
of the inseparability of the two electric forces (1177.),
and another argument for the view that induction and
its concomitant phenomena depend upon a polarity of
the particles of matter.
1245. Although inclined at first
to refer these effects to a peculiar masked condition
of a certain portion of the forces, I think I have
since correctly traced them to known principles of
electrical action. The effects appear to be due
to an actual penetration of the charge to some distance
within the electric, at each of its two surfaces, by
what we call conduction; so that, to use the
ordinary phrase, the electric forces sustaining the
induction are not upon the metallic surfaces only,
but upon and within the dielectric also, extending
to a greater or smaller depth from the metal linings.
Let c (fi.) be the section of a plate
of any dielectric, a and b being the
metallic coatings; let b be uninsulated, and
a be charged positively; after ten or fifteen
minutes, if a and b be discharged, insulated,
and immediately examined, no electricity will appear
in them; but in a short time, upon a second examination,
they will appear charged in the same way, though not
to the same degree, as they were at first. Now
suppose that a portion of the positive force has,
under the coercing influence of all the forces concerned,
penetrated the dielectric and taken up its place at
the line p, a corresponding portion of the
negative force having also assumed its position at
the line n; that in fact the electric at these
two parts has become charged positive and negative;
then it is clear that the induction of these two forces
will be much greater one towards the other, and less
in an external direction, now that they are at the
small distance np from each other, than when
they were at the larger interval ab. Then
let a and b be discharged; the discharge
destroys or neutralizes all external induction, and
the coatings are therefore found by the carrier ball
unelectrified; but it also removes almost the whole
of the forces by which the electric charge was driven
into the dielectric, and though probably a part of
that charge goes forward in its passage and terminates
in what we call discharge, the greater portion returns
on its course to the surfaces of c, and consequently
to the conductors a and b, and constitutes
the recharge observed.
1246. The following is the experiment
on which I rest for the truth of this view. Two
plates of spermaceti, d and, f (fi.), were put together to form the dielectric, a
and b being the metallic coatings of this compound
plate, as before. The system was charged, then
discharged, insulated, examined, and found to give
no indications of electricity to the carrier ball.
The plates d and fwere then separated
from each other, and instantly a with d
was found in a positive state, and b with f
in a negative state, nearly all the electricity being
in the linings a and b. Hence it
is clear that, of the forces sought for, the positive
was in one-half of the compound plate and the negative
in the other half; for when removed bodily with the
plates from each other’s inductive influence,
they appeared in separate places, and resumed of necessity
their power of acting by induction on the electricity
of surrounding bodies. Had the effect depended
upon a peculiar relation of the contiguous particles
of matter only, then each half-plate, d and
f, should have shown positive force on one
surface and negative on the other.
1247. Thus it would appear that
the best solid insulators, such as shell-lac,
glass, and sulphur, have conductive properties
to such an extent, that electricity can penetrate
them bodily, though always subject to the overruling
condition of induction (1178.). As to the depth
to which the forces penetrate in this form of charge
of the particles, theoretically, it should be throughout
the mass, for what the charge of the metal does for
the portion of dielectric next to it, should be close
by the charged dielectric for the portion next beyond
it again; but probably in the best insulators the
sensible charge is to a very small depth only in the
dielectric, for otherwise more would disappear in the
first instance whilst the original charge is sustained,
less time would be required for the assumption of
the particular state, and more electricity would re-appear
as return charge.
1248. The condition of time
required for this penetration of the charge is important,
both as respects the general relation of the cases
to conduction, and also the removal of an objection
that might otherwise properly be raised to certain
results respecting specific inductive capacities,
hereafter to be given (1269. 1277.)
1249. It is the assumption for
a time of this charged state of the glass between
the coatings in the Leyden jar, which gives origin
to a well-known phenomenon, usually referred to the
diffusion of electricity over the uncoated portion
of the glass, namely, the residual charge.
The extent of charge which can spontaneously be recovered
by a large battery, after perfect uninsulation of
both surfaces, is very considerable, and by far the
largest portion of this is due to the return of electricity
in the manner described. A plate of shell-lac
six inches square, and half an inch thick, or
a similar plate of spermaceti an inch thick, being
coated on the sides with tinfoil as a Leyden arrangement,
will show this effect exceedingly well.
1250. The peculiar condition
of dielectrics which has now been described, is evidently
capable of producing an effect interfering with the
results and conclusions drawn from the use of the
two inductive apparatus, when shell-lac, glass,
&c. is used in one or both of them (1192. 1207.), for
upon dividing the charge in such cases according to
the method described (1198. 1207.), it is evident
that the apparatus just receiving its half charge
must fall faster in its tension than the other.
For suppose app. i. first charged, and app. ii. used
to divide with it; though both may actually lose alike,
yet app. i., which has been diminished one-half, will
be sustained by a certain degree of return action or
charge (1234.), whilst app. ii. will sink the more
rapidly from the coming on of the particular state.
I have endeavoured to avoid this interference by performing
the whole process of comparison as quickly as possible,
and taking the force of app. ii. immediately after
the division, before any sensible diminution of the
tension arising from the assumption of the peculiar
state could be produced; and I have assumed that as
about three minutes pass between the first charge
of app. i. and the division, and three minutes between
the division and discharge, when the force of the
non-transferable electricity is measured, the contrary
tendencies for those periods would keep that apparatus
in a moderately steady and uniform condition for the
latter portion of time.
1251. The particular action described
occurs in the shell-lac of the stems, as well
as in the dielectric used within the apparatus.
It therefore constitutes a cause by which the outside
of the stems may in some operations become charged
with electricity, independent of the action of dust
or carrying particles (1203.).
P v. On specific induction, or
specific inductive capacity.
1252. I now proceed to examine
the great question of specific inductive capacity,
i.e. whether different dielectric bodies actually
do possess any influence over the degree of induction
which takes place through them. If any such difference
should exist, it appeared to me not only of high importance
in the further comprehension of the laws and results
of induction, but an additional and very powerful
argument for the theory I have ventured to put forth,
that the whole depends upon a molecular action, in
contradistinction to one at sensible distances.
The question may be stated thus:
suppose A an electrified plate of metal suspended
in the air, and B and C two exactly similar plates,
placed parallel to and on each side of A at equal
distances and uninsulated; A will then induce equally
towards B and C. If in this position of the plates
some other dielectric than air, as shell-lac, be introduced between A and
C, will the induction between them remain the same? Will the relation of C
and B to A be unaltered, notwithstanding the difference of the dielectrics
interposed between them?
1253. As far as I recollect,
it is assumed that no change will occur under such
variation of circumstances, and that the relations
of B find C to A depend entirely upon their distance.
I only remember one experimental illustration of the
question, and that is by Coulomb, in which he shows
that a wire surrounded by shell-lac took exactly
the same quantity of electricity from a charged body
as the same wire in air. The experiment offered
to me no proof of the truth of the supposition:
for it is not the mere films of dielectric substances
surrounding the charged body which have to be examined
and compared, but the whole mass between that
body and the surrounding conductors at which the induction
terminates. Charge depends upon induction (1171.
1178.); and if induction is related to the particles
of the surrounding dielectric, then it is related to
all the particles of that dielectric inclosed
by the surrounding conductors, and not merely to the
few situated next to the charged body. Whether
the difference I sought for existed or not, I soon
found reason to doubt the conclusion that might be
drawn from Coulomb’s result; and therefore had
the apparatus made, which, with its use, has been
already described (1187, &c.), and which appears to
me well-suited for the investigation of the question.
1254. Glass, and many bodies
which might at first be considered as very fit to
test the principle, proved exceedingly unfit for that
purpose. Glass, principally in consequence of
the alkali it contains, however well-warmed and dried
it may be, has a certain degree of conducting power
upon its surface, dependent upon the moisture of the
atmosphere, which renders it unfit for a test experiment.
Resin, wax, naphtha, oil of turpentine, and many other
substances were in turn rejected, because of a slight
degree of conducting power possessed by them; and
ultimately shell-lac and sulphur were chosen,
after many experiments, as the dielectrics best fitted
for the investigation. No difficulty can arise
in perceiving how the possession of a feeble degree
of conducting power tends to make a body produce effects,
which would seem to indicate that it had a greater
capability of allowing induction through it than another
body perfect in its insulation. This source of
error has been that which I have found most difficult
to obviate in the proving experiments.
1255. Induction through shell-lac.—As
a preparatory experiment, I first ascertained generally
that when a part of the surface of a thick plate of
shell-lac was excited or charged, there was no
sensible difference in the character of the induction
sustained by that charged part, whether exerted through
the air in the one direction, or through the shell-lac
of the plate in the other; provided the second surface
of the plate had not, by contact with conductors,
the action of dust, or any other means, become charged
(1203.). Its solid condition enabled it to retain
the excited particles in a permanent position, but
that appeared to be all; for these particles acted
just as freely through the shell-lac on one side
as through the air on the other. The same general
experiment was made by attaching a disc of tinfoil
to one side of the shell-lac plate, and electrifying
it, and the results were the same. Scarcely any
other solid substance than shell-lac and sulphur,
and no liquid substance that I have tried, will bear
this examination. Glass in its ordinary state
utterly fails; yet it was essentially necessary to
obtain this prior degree of perfection in the dielectric
used, before any further progress could be made in
the principal investigation.
1256. Shell-lac and air were
compared in the first place. For this purpose
a thick hemispherical cup of shell-lac was introduced
into the lower hemisphere of one of the inductive
apparatus (1187, &c.), so as nearly to fill the lower
half of the space o, o (fi.) between it
and the inner ball; and then charges were divided in
the manner already described (1198. 1207.), each apparatus
being used in turn to receive the first charge before
its division by the other. As the apparatus were
known to have equal inductive power when air was in
both (1209. 1211.), any differences resulting from
the introduction of the shell-lac would show a
peculiar action in it, and if unequivocally referable
to a specific inductive influence, would establish
the point sought to be sustained. I have already
referred to the precautions necessary in making the
experiments (1199, &c.); and with respect to the error
which might be introduced by the assumption of the
peculiar state, it was guarded against, as far as
possible, in the first place, by operating quickly
(1248); and, afterwards, by using that dielectric
as glass or sulphur, which assumed the peculiar state
most slowly, and in the least degree (1239. 1241.).
1257. The shell-lac hemisphere
was put into app. i., and app. ii. left filled with
air. The results of an experiment in which the
charge through air was divided and reduced by the
shell-lac app. were as follows:
1258. Here 297 deg., minus
7 deg., or 290 deg., may be taken as the
divisible charge of app. ii. (the 7 deg. being
fixed stem action (1203. 1232.)), of which 145 deg.
is the half. The lac app. i. gave 113 deg.
as the power or tension it had acquired after division;
and the air app. ii. gave 121 deg., minus 7 deg.,
or 114 deg., as the force it possessed from what
it retained of the divisible charge of 290 deg..
These two numbers should evidently be alike, and they
are very nearly so, indeed far within the errors of
experiment and observation, but these numbers differ
very much from 145 deg., or the force which the
half charge would have had if app. i. had contained
air instead of shell-lac; and it appears that
whilst in the division the induction through the air
has lost 176 deg. of force, that through the
lac has only gained 113 deg..
1259. If this difference be assumed
as depending entirely on the greater facility possessed
by shell-lac of allowing or causing inductive
action through its substance than that possessed by
air, then this capacity for electric induction would
be inversely as the respective loss and gain indicated
above; and assuming the capacity of the air apparatus
as 1, that of the shell-lac apparatus would
be 176/113 or 1.55.
1260. This extraordinary difference
was so unexpected in its amount, as to excite the
greatest suspicion of the general accuracy of the experiment,
though the perfect discharge of app. i. after the division,
showed that the 113 deg. had been taken and given
up readily. It was evident that, if it really
existed, it ought to produce corresponding effects
in the reverse order; and that when induction through
shell-lac was converted into induction through
air, the force or tension of the whole ought to be
increased. The app. i. was therefore charged
in the first place, and its force divided with app.
ii. The following were the results:
1261. Here 204 deg. must
be the utmost of the divisible charge. The app.
i. and app. ii. present 118 deg. as their respective
forces; both now much above the half of the
first force, or 102 deg., whereas in the former
case they were below it. The lac app. i.
has lost only 86 deg., yet it has given to the
air app. i deg., so that the lac still
appears much to surpass the air, the capacity of the
lac app. i. to the air app. ii. being as 1.37
to 1.
1262. The difference of 1.55
and 1.37 as the expression of the capacity for the
induction of shell-lac seems considerable, but
is in reality very admissible under the circumstances,
for both are in error in contrary directions.
Thus in the last experiment the charge fell from 215
deg. to 204 deg. by the joint effects of
dissipation and absorption (1192. 1250.), during the
time which elapsed in the electrometer operations,
between the applications of the carrier ball required
to give those two results. Nearly an equal time
must have elapsed between the application of the carrier
which gave the 204 deg. result, and the division
of the charge between the two apparatus; and as the
fall in force progressively decreases in amount (1192.),
if in this case it be taken at 6 deg. only, it
will reduce the whole transferable charge at the time
of division to 198 deg. instead of 204 deg.;
this diminishes the loss of the shell-lac charge
to 80 deg. instead of 86 deg.; and then
the expression of specific capacity for it is increased,
and, instead of 1.37, is 1.47 times that of air.
1263. Applying the same correction
to the former experiment in which air was first
charged, the result is of the contrary kind.
No shell-lac hemisphere was then in the apparatus,
and therefore the loss would be principally from dissipation,
and not from absorption: hence it would be nearer
to the degree of loss shown by the numbers 304 deg.
and 297 deg., and being assumed as 6 deg.
would reduce the divisible charge to 284 deg..
In that case the air would have lost 170 deg.,
and communicated only 113 deg. to the shell-lac;
and the relative specific capacity of the latter would
appear to be 1.50, which is very little indeed removed
from 1.47, the expression given by the second experiment
when corrected in the same way.
1264. The shell-lac was
then removed from app. i. and put into app. ii. and
the experiments of division again made. I give
the results, because I think the importance of the
point justifies and even requires them.
Here app. i. retained 109 deg.,
having lost 174 deg. in communicating 110 deg.
to app. ii.; and the capacity of the air app. is to
the lac app., therefore, as 1 to 1.58. If
the divided charge be corrected for an assumed loss
of only 3 deg., being the amount of previous
loss in the same time, it will make the capacity of
the shell-lac ap.55 only.
1265. Then app. ii. was charged,
and the charge divided thus:
Here app. i. acquired a charge of
146 deg., while app. ii. lost only 102 deg.
in communicating that amount of force; the capacities
being, therefore, to each other as 1 to 1.43.
If the whole transferable charge be corrected for
a loss of 4 deg. previous to division, it gives
the expression of for the capacity of the shell-lac
apparatus.
1266. These four expressions
of 1.47, 1.50, 1.55, and 1.49 for the power of the
shell-lac apparatus, through the different
variations of the experiment, are very near to each
other; the average is close upon 1.5, which may hereafter
be used as the expression of the result. It is
a very important result; and, showing for this particular
piece of shell-lac a decided superiority over
air in allowing or causing the act of induction, it
proved the growing necessity of a more close and rigid
examination of the whole question.
1267. The shell-lac was
of the best quality, and had been carefully selected
and cleaned; but as the action of any conducting particles
in it would tend, virtually, to diminish the quantity
or thickness of the dielectric used, and produce effects
as if the two inducing surfaces of the conductors
in that apparatus were nearer together than in the
one with air only, I prepared another shell-lac
hemisphere, of which the material had been dissolved
in strong spirit of wine, the solution filtered, and
then carefully evaporated. This is not an easy
operation, for it is difficult to drive off the last
portions of alcohol without injuring the lac by
the heat applied; and unless they be dissipated, the
substance left conducts too well to be used in these
experiments. I prepared two hemispheres this way,
one of them unexceptionable; and with it I repeated
the former experiments with all precautions.
The results were exactly of the same kind; the following
expressions for the capacity of the shell-lac
apparatus, whether it were app. i. or ii., being
given directly by the experiments, 1.46, 1.50, 1.52,
1.51; the average of these and several others being
very nearly 1.5.
1268. As a final check upon the
general conclusion, I then actually brought the surfaces
of the air apparatus, corresponding to the place of
the shell-lac in its apparatus, nearer together,
by putting a metallic lining into the lower hemisphere
of the one not containing the lac (1213.).
The distance of the metal surface from the carrier
ball was in this way diminished from 0.62 of an inch
to 0.435 of an inch, whilst the interval occupied
by the lac in the other apparatus remained
of an inch as before. Notwithstanding this change,
the lac apparatus showed its former superiority;
and whether it or the air apparatus was charged first,
the capacity of the lac apparatus to the
air apparatus was by the experimental results as 1.45
to 1.
1269. From all the experiments
I have made, and their constant results, I cannot
resist the conclusion that shell-lac does exhibit
a case of specific inductive capacity.
I have tried to check the trials in every way, and
if not remove, at least estimate, every source of error.
That the final result is not due to common conduction
is shown by the capability of the apparatus to retain
the communicated charge; that it is not due to the
conductive power of inclosed small particles, by which
they could acquire a polarized condition as conductors,
is shown by the effects of the shell-lac purified
by alcohol; and, that it is not due to any influence
of the charged state, formerly described (1250.),
first absorbing and then evolving electricity, is
indicated by the instantaneous assumption and
discharge of those portions of the power which are
concerned in the phenomena, that instantaneous effect
occurring in these cases, as in all others of ordinary
induction, by charged conductors. The latter argument
is the more striking in the case where the air apparatus
is employed to divide the charge with the lac
apparatus, for it obtains its portion of electricity
in an instant, and yet is charged far above
the mean.
1270. Admitting for the present
the general fact sought to be proved; then 1.5, though
it expresses the capacity of the apparatus containing
the hemisphere of shell-lac, by no means expresses
the relation of lac to air. The lac
only occupies one-half of the space o, o, of
the apparatus containing it, through which the induction
is sustained; the rest is filled with air, as in the
other apparatus; and if the effect of the two upper
halves of the globes be abstracted, then the comparison
of the shell-lac powers in the lower half of
the one, with the power of the air in the lower half
of the other, will be as 2:1; and even this must be
less than the truth, for the induction of the upper
part of the apparatus, i.e. of the wire and ball
B. (fi.) to external objects, must be the same
in both, and considerably diminish the difference
dependent upon, and really producible by, the influence
of the shell-lac within.
1271. Glass.—I next
worked with glass as the dielectric. It involved
the possibility of conduction on its surface, but
it excluded the idea of conducting particles within
its substance (1267.) other than those of its own
mass. Besides this it does not assume the charged
state (1239.) so readily, or to such an extent, as
shell-lac.
1272. A thin hemispherical cup
of glass being made hot was covered with a coat of
shell-lac dissolved in alcohol, and after being
dried for many hours in a hot place, was put into
the apparatus and experimented with. It exhibited
effects so slight, that, though they were in the direction
indicating a superiority of glass over air, they were
allowed to pass as possible errors of experiment;
and the glass was considered as producing no sensible
effect.
1273. I then procured a thick
hemispherical flint glass cup resembling that of shell-lac
(1239.), but not filling up the space o, o,
so well. Its average thickness was 0.4 of an
inch, there being an additional thickness of air,
averaging 0.22 of an inch, to make up the whole space
of 0.62 of an inch between the inductive metallic
surfaces. It was covered with a film of shell-lac
as the former was, (1272.) and being made very warm,
was introduced into the apparatus, also warmed, and
experiments made with it as in the former instances
(1257. &c.). The general results were the same
as with shell-lac, i.e. glass surpassed
air in its power of favouring induction through it.
The two best results as respected the state of the
apparatus for retention of charge, &c., gave, when
the air apparatus was charged first 1.336, and when
the glass apparatus was charged first 1.45, as the
specific inductive capacity for glass, both being without
correction. The average of nine results, four
with the glass apparatus first charged, and five with
the air apparatus first charged, gave 1.38 as the
power of the glass apparatus; 1.22 and 1.46 being the
minimum and maximum numbers with all the errors of
experiment upon them. In all the experiments
the glass apparatus took up its inductive charge instantly,
and lost it as readily (1269.); and during the short
time of each experiment, acquired the peculiar state
in a small degree only, so that the influence of this
state, and also of conduction upon the results, must
have been small.
1274. Allowing specific inductive
capacity to be proved and active in this case, and
1.38 as the expression for the glass apparatus, then
the specific inductive capacity of flint glass will
be above 1.76, not forgetting that this expression
is for a piece of glass of such thickness as to occupy
not quite two-thirds of the space through which the
induction is sustained (1253. 1273.).
1275. Sulphur.—The
same hemisphere of this substance was used in app.
ii. as was formerly referred to (1242.). The experiments
were well made, i.e. the sulphur itself was free
from charge both before and after each experiment,
and no action from the stem appeared (1203. 1232.),
so that no correction was required on that account.
The following are the results when the air apparatus
was first charged and divided:
Here app. i. retained 164 deg.,
having lost 276 deg. in communicating 162 deg.
to app. ii., and the capacity of the air apparatus
is to that of the sulphur apparatus as 1 to 1.66.
1276. Then the sulphur apparatus was charged
first, thus:
Here app. ii. retained 238 deg.,
and gave up 150 deg. in communicating a charge
of 237 deg. to app. i., and the capacity of the
air apparatus is to that of the sulphur apparatus
as 1 to 1.58. These results are very near to each
other, and we may take the mean 1.62 as representing
the specific inductive capacity of the sulphur apparatus;
in which case the specific inductive capacity of sulphur
itself as compared to air = 1 (1270.) will be about
or above 2.24.
1277. This result with sulphur
I consider as one of the most unexceptionable.
The substance when fused was perfectly clear, pellucid,
and free from particles of dirt (1267.), so that no
interference of small conducting bodies confused the
result. The substance when solid is an excellent
insulator, and by experiment was found to take up,
with great slowness, that state (1244. 1242.) which
alone seemed likely to disturb the conclusion.
The experiments themselves, also, were free from any
need of correction. Yet notwithstanding these
circumstances, so favourable to the exclusion of error,
the result is a higher specific inductive capacity
for sulphur than for any other body as yet tried;
and though this may in part be clue to the sulphur
being in a better shape, i.e. filling up more
completely the space o, o, (fi.) than
the cups of shell-lac and glass, still I feel
satisfied that the experiments altogether fully prove
the existence of a difference between dielectrics as
to their power of favouring an inductive action through
them; which difference may, for the present, be expressed
by the term specific inductive capacity.
1278. Having thus established
the point in the most favourable cases that I could
anticipate, I proceeded to examine other bodies amongst
solids, liquids, and gases. These results I shall
give with all convenient brevity.
1279. Spermaceti.—A
good hemisphere of spermaceti being tried as to conducting
power whilst its two surfaces were still in contact
with the tinfoil moulds used in forming it, was found
to conduct sensibly even whilst warm. On removing
it from the moulds and using it in one of the apparatus,
it gave results indicating a specific inductive capacity
between 1.3 and 1.6 for the apparatus containing it.
But as the only mode of operation was to charge the
air apparatus, and then after a quick contact with
the spermaceti apparatus, ascertain what was left in
the former (1281.), no great confidence can be placed
in the results. They are not in opposition to
the general conclusion, but cannot be brought forward
as argument in favour of it.
1280. I endeavoured to find some
liquids which would insulate well, and could be obtained
in sufficient quantity for these experiments.
Oil of turpentine, native naphtha rectified, and the
condensed oil gas fluid, appeared by common experiments
to promise best as to insulation. Being left
in contact with fused carbonate of potassa, chloride
of lime, and quick lime for some days and then filtered,
they were found much injured in insulating power;
but after distillation acquired their best state, though
even then they proved to be conductors when extensive
metallic contact was made with them.
1281. Oil of turpentine rectified.—I
filled the lower half of app. i. with the fluid:
and as it would not hold a charge sufficiently to enable
me first to measure and then divide it, I charged
app. ii. containing air, and dividing its charge with
app. i. by a quick contact, measured that remaining
in app. ii.: for, theoretically, if a quick contact
would divide up to equal tension between the two apparatus,
yet without sensible loss from the conducting power
of app. i.; and app. ii. were left charged to a degree
of tension above half the original charge, it would
indicate that oil of turpentine had less specific
inductive capacity than air; or, if left charged below
that mean state of tension, it would imply that the
fluid had the greater inductive capacity. In an
experiment of this kind, app. ii. gave as its charge
390 deg. before division with app. i., and 175
deg. afterwards, which is less than the half
of 390 deg.. Again, being at 176 deg.
before division, it was 79 deg. after, which is
also less than half the divided charge. Being
at 79 deg., it was a third time divided, and then
fell to 36 deg., less than the half of 79 deg..
Such are the best results I could obtain; they are
not inconsistent with the belief that oil of turpentine
has a greater specific capacity than air, but they
do not prove the fact, since the disappearance of
more than half the charge may be due to the conducting
power merely of the fluid.
1282. Naphtha.—This
liquid gave results similar in their nature and direction
to those with oil of turpentine.
1283. A most interesting class
of substances, in relation to specific inductive capacity,
now came under review, namely, the gases or aeriform
bodies. These are so peculiarly constituted, and
are bound together by so many striking physical and
chemical relations, that I expected some remarkable
results from them: air in various states was selected
for the first experiments.
1284. Air, rare and dense.—Some
experiments of division (1208.) seemed to show that
dense and rare air were alike in the property under
examination. A simple and better process was to
attach one of the apparatus to an air-pump, to charge
it, and then examine the tension of the charge when
the air within was more or less rarefied. Under
these circumstances it was found, that commencing
with a certain charge, that charge did not change
in its tension or force as the air was rarefied, until
the rarefaction was such that discharge across
the space o, o (fi.) occurred.
This discharge was proportionate to the rarefaction;
but having taken place, and lowered the tension to
a certain degree, that degree was not at all affected
by restoring the pressure and density of the air to
their first quantities.
1285. The charges were low in
these experiments, first that they might not pass
off at low pressure, and next that little loss by dissipation
might occur. I now reduced them still lower,
that I might rarefy further, and for this purpose
in the following experiment used a measuring interval
in the electrometer of only 15 deg. (1185.).
The pressure of air within the apparatus being reduced
to 1.9 inches of mercury, the charge was found to be
29 deg.; then letting in air till the pressure
was 30 inches, the charge was still 29 deg..
1286. These experiments were
repeated with pure oxygen with the same consequences.
1287. This result of no variation
in the electric tension being produced by variation
in the density or pressure of the air, agrees perfectly
with those obtained by Mr. Harris, and described
in his beautiful and important investigations contained
in the Philosophical Transactions; namely that induction
is the same in rare and dense air, and that the divergence
of an electrometer under such variations of the air
continues the same, provided no electricity pass away
from it. The effect is one entirely independent
of that power which dense air has of causing a higher
charge to be retained upon the surface of conductors
in it than can be retained by the same conductors
in rare air; a point I propose considering hereafter.
1288. I then compared hot
and cold air together, by raising the temperature
of one of the inductive apparatus as high as it could
be without injury, and then dividing charges between
it and the other apparatus containing cold air.
The temperatures were about 50 deg. and 200 deg.,
Still the power or capacity appeared to be unchanged;
and when I endeavoured to vary the experiment, by
charging a cold apparatus and then warming it by a
spirit lamp, I could obtain no proof that the inductive
capacity underwent any alteration.
1289. I compared damp and
dry air together, but could find no difference
in the results.
1290. Gases.—A very
long series of experiments was then undertaken for
the purpose of comparing different gases one
with another. They were all found to insulate
well, except such as acted on the shell-lac of
the supporting stem; these were chlorine, ammonia,
and muriatic acid. They were all dried by appropriate
means before being introduced into the apparatus.
It would have been sufficient to have compared each
with air; but, in consequence of the striking result
which came out, namely, that all had the same power
of or capacity for, sustaining induction
through them, (which perhaps might have been expected
after it was found that no variation of density or
pressure produced any effect,) I was induced to compare
them, experimentally, two and two in various ways,
that no difference might escape me, and that the sameness
of result might stand in full opposition to the contrast
of property, composition, and condition which the
gases themselves presented.
1291. The experiments were made
upon the following pairs of gases.
1. Nitrogen and Oxygen.
2. Oxygen Air.
3. Hydrogen Air.
4. Muriatic acid gas Air.
5. Oxygen Hydrogen.
5. Oxygen Carbonic acid.
7. Oxygen Olefiant gas.
8. Oxygen Nitrous gas.
9. Oxygen Sulphurous acid.
10. Oxygen Ammonia.
11. Hydrogen Carbonic acid.
12 Hydrogen Olefiant gas.
13. Hydrogen Sulphurous acid.
14. Hydrogen Fluo-silicic acid.
15. Hydrogen Ammonia.
16, Hydrogen Arseniuretted hydrogen.
17. Hydrogen Sulphuretted hydrogen.
18, Nitrogen Olefiant gas.
19. Nitrogen Nitrous gas.
20. Nitrogen Nitrous oxide.
21. Nitrogen Ammonia.
22. Carbonic oxide Carbonic acid.
23. Carbonic oxide Olefiant gas.
24. Nitrous oxide Nitrous gas.
25. Ammonia Sulphurous acid.
1292. Notwithstanding the striking
contrasts of all kinds which these gases present of
property, of density, whether simple or compound, anions
or cations (665.), of high or low pressure (1284.
1286.), hot or cold (1288.), not the least difference
in their capacity to favour or admit electrical induction
through them could be perceived. Considering the
point established, that in all these gases induction
takes place by an action of contiguous particles,
this is the more important, and adds one to the many
striking relations which hold between bodies having
the gaseous condition and form. Another equally
important electrical relation, which will be examined
in the next paper, is that which the different gases
have to each other at the same pressure of
causing the retention of the same or different
degrees of charge upon conductors in them.
These two results appear to bear importantly upon
the subject of electrochemical excitation and decomposition;
for as all these phenomena, different as they
seem to be, must depend upon the electrical forces
of the particles of matter, the very distance at which
they seem to stand from each other will do much, if
properly considered, to illustrate the principle by
which they are held in one common bond, and subject,
as they must be, to one common law.
1293. It is just possible that
the gases may differ from each other in their specific
inductive capacity, and yet by quantities so small
as not to be distinguished in the apparatus I have
used. It must be remembered, however, that in
the gaseous experiments the gases occupy all the space
o, o, (fi.) between the inner and the
outer ball, except the small portion filled by the
stem; and the results, therefore, are twice as delicate
as those with solid dielectrics.
1294. The insulation was good
in all the experiments recorded, except No, 15, 21, and 25, being those in which ammonia was
compared with other gases. When shell-lac
is put into ammoniacal gas its surface gradually acquires
conducting power, and in this way the lac part
of the stem within was so altered, that the ammonia
apparatus could not retain a charge with sufficient
steadiness to allow of division. In these experiments,
therefore, the other apparatus was charged; its charge
measured and divided with the ammonia apparatus by
a quick contact, and what remained untaken away by
the division again measured (1281.). It was so
nearly one-half of the original charge, as to authorize,
with this reservation, the insertion of ammoniacal
gas amongst the other gases, as having equal power
with them.
P vi. General results as to induction.
1295. Thus induction appears
to be essentially an action of contiguous particles,
through the intermediation of which the electric force,
originating or appearing at a certain place, is propagated
to or sustained at a distance, appearing there as
a force of the same kind exactly equal in amount,
but opposite in its direction and tendencies (1164.).
Induction requires no sensible thickness in the conductors
which may be used to limit its extent; an uninsulated
leaf of gold may be made very highly positive on one
surface, and as highly negative on the other, without
the least interference of the two states whilst the
inductions continue. Nor is it affected by the
nature of the limiting conductors, provided time be
allowed, in the case of those which conduct slowly,
for them to assume their final state (1170.).
1296. But with regard to the
dielectrics or insulating media, matters are
very different (1167.). Their thickness has an
immediate and important influence on the degree of
induction. As to their quality, though all gases
and vapours are alike, whatever their state; yet amongst
solid bodies, and between them and gases, there are
differences which prove the existence of specific
inductive capacities, these differences being in
some cases very great.
1297. The direct inductive force,
which may be conceived to be exerted in lines between
the two limiting and charged conducting surfaces, is
accompanied by a lateral or transverse force equivalent
to a dilatation or repulsion of these representative
lines (1224.); or the attractive force which exists
amongst the particles of the dielectric in the direction
of the induction is accompanied by a repulsive or
a diverging force in the transverse direction (1304.).
1298. Induction appears to consist
in a certain polarized state of the particles, into
which they are thrown by the electrified body sustaining
the action, the particles assuming positive and negative
points or parts, which are symmetrically arranged
with respect to each other and the inducting surfaces
or particles. The state must be a forced one,
for it is originated and sustained only by force,
and sinks to the normal or quiescent state when that
force is removed. It can be continued only
in insulators by the same portion of electricity,
because they only can retain this state of the particles
(1304).
The theory of induction which I am
stating does not pretend to decide whether electricity
be a fluid or fluids, or a mere power or condition
of recognized matter. That is a question which
I may be induced to consider in the next or following
series of these researches.
1299. The principle of induction
is of the utmost generality in electric action.
It constitutes charge in every ordinary case, and probably
in every case; it appears to be the cause of all excitement,
and to precede every current. The degree to which
the particles are affected in this their forced state,
before discharge of one kind or another supervenes,
appears to constitute what we call intensity.
1300. When a Leyden jar is charged,
the particles of the glass are forced into this polarized
and constrained condition by the electricity of the
charging apparatus. Discharge is the return
of these particles to their natural state from their
state of tension, whenever the two electric forces
are allowed to be disposed of in some other direction.
1301. All charge of conductors
is on their surface, because being essentially inductive,
it is there only that the medium capable of sustaining
the necessary inductive state begins. If the conductors
are hollow and contain air or any other dielectric,
still no charge can appear upon that internal
surface, because the dielectric there cannot assume
the polarized state throughout, in consequence of the
opposing actions in different directions.
1302. The known influence of
form is perfectly consistent with the corpuscular
view of induction set forth. An electrified cylinder
is more affected by the influence of the surrounding
conductors (which complete the condition of charge)
at the ends than at the middle, because the ends are
exposed to a greater sum of inductive forces than the
middle; and a point is brought to a higher condition
than a ball, because by relation to the conductors
around, more inductive force terminates on its surface
than on an equal surface of the ball with which it
is compared. Here too, especially, can be perceived
the influence of the lateral or transverse force (1297.),
which, being a power of the nature of or equivalent
to repulsion, causes such a disposition of the lines
of inductive force in their course across the dielectric,
that they must accumulate upon the point, the end
of the cylinder, or any projecting part.
1303. The influence of distance
is also in harmony with the same view. There
is perhaps no distance so great that induction cannot
take place through it; but with the same constraining
force (1298.) it takes place the more easily, according
as the extent of dielectric through which it is exerted
is lessened. And as it is assumed by the theory
that the particles of the dielectric, though tending
to remain in a normal state, are thrown into a forced
condition during the induction; so it would seem to
follow that the fewer there are of these intervening
particles opposing their tendency to the assumption
of the new state, the greater degree of change will
they suffer, i.e. the higher will be the condition
they assume, and the larger the amount of inductive
action exerted through them.
I have traced it experimentally from
a ball placed in the middle of the large cube formerly
described (1173.) to the sides of the cube six feet
distant, and also from the same ball placed in the
middle of our large lecture-room to the walls of
the room at twenty-six feet distance, the charge
sustained upon the ball in these cases being solely
due to induction through these distances.
1304. I have used the phrases
lines of inductive force and curved lines
of force (1231. 1297. 1298. 1302.) in a general sense
only, just as we speak of the lines of magnetic force.
The lines are imaginary, and the force in any part
of them is of course the resultant of compound forces,
every molecule being related to every other molecule
in all directions by the tension and reaction
of those which are contiguous. The transverse
force is merely this relation considered in a direction
oblique to the lines of inductive force, and at present
I mean no more than that by the phrase. With
respect to the term polarity also, I mean at
present only a disposition of force by which the same
molecule acquires opposite powers on different parts.
The particular way in which this disposition is made
will come into consideration hereafter, and probably
varies in different bodies, and so produces variety
of electrical relation. All I am anxious about
at present is, that a more particular meaning should
not be attached to the expressions used than I contemplate.
Further inquiry, I trust, will enable us by degrees
to restrict the sense more and more, and so render
the explanation of electrical phenomena day by day
more and more definite.
See now 1685. &c.—De.
1305. As a test of the probable
accuracy of my views, I have throughout this experimental
examination compared them with the conclusions drawn
by M. Poisson from his beautiful mathematical inquiries.
I am quite unfit to form a judgment of these admirable
papers; but as far as I can perceive, the theory I
have set forth and the results I have obtained are
not in opposition to such of those conclusions as
represent the final disposition and state of the forces
in the limited number of cases be has considered.
His theory assumes a very different mode of action
in induction to that which I have ventured to support,
and would probably find its mathematical test in the
endeavour to apply it to cases of induction in curved
lines. To my feeling it is insufficient in accounting
for the retention of electricity upon the surface
of conductors by the pressure of the air, an effect
which I hope to show is simple and consistent according
to the present view; and it does not touch voltaic
electricity, or in any way associate it and what is
called ordinary electricity under one common principle.
I have also looked with some anxiety
to the results which that indefatigable philosopher
Harris has obtained in his investigation of the laws
of induction, knowing that they were experimental,
and having a full conviction of their exactness; but
I am happy in perceiving no collision at present between
them and the views I have taken.
1306. Finally, I beg to say that
I put forth my particular view with doubt and fear,
lest it should not bear the test of general examination,
for unless true it will only embarrass the progress
of electrical science. It has long been on my
mind, but I hesitated to publish it until the increasing
persuasion of its accordance with all known facts,
and the manner in which it linked together effects
apparently very different in kind, urged me to write
the present paper. I as yet see no inconsistency
between it and nature, but, on the contrary, think
I perceive much new light thrown by it on her operations;
and my next papers will be devoted to a review of
the phenomena of conduction, electrolyzation, current,
magnetism, retention, discharge, and some other points,
with an application of the theory to these effects,
and an examination of it by them.
Royal Institution, November 16,
1837.
Supplementary Note to Experimental
Researches in Electricity.
Eleventh Series.
Received March 29, 1838.
1307. I have recently put into
an experimental form that general statement of the
question of specific inductive capacity which
is given at N of Series XI., and the result
is such as to lead me to hope the Council of the Royal
Society will authorize its addition to the paper in
the form of a supplementary note. Three circular
brass plates, about five inches in diameter, were
mounted side by side upon insulating pillars; the middle
one, A, was a fixture, but the outer plates B and C
were moveable on slides, so that all three could be
brought with their sides almost into contact, or separated
to any required distance. Two gold leaves were
suspended in a glass jar from insulated wires; one
of the outer plates B was connected with one of the
gold leaves, and the other outer plate with the other
leaf. The outer plates B and C were adjusted at
the distance of an inch and a quarter from the middle
plate A, and the gold leaves were fixed at two inches
apart; A was then slightly charged with electricity,
and the plates B and C, with their gold leaves, thrown
out of insulation at the same time, and then
left insulated. In this state of things A was
charged positive inductrically, and B and C negative
inducteously; the same dielectric, air, being in the
two intervals, and the gold leaves hanging, of course,
parallel to each other in a relatively unelectrified
state.
1308. A plate of shell-lac
three-quarters of an inch in thickness, and four inches
square, suspended by clean white silk thread, was very
carefully deprived of all charge (1203.) (so that
it produced no effect on the gold leaves if A were
uncharged) and then introduced between plates A and
B; the electric relation of the three plates was immediately
altered, and the gold leaves attracted each other.
On removing the shell-lac this attraction ceased;
on introducing it between A and C it was renewed; on
removing it the attraction again ceased; and the shell-lac
when examined by a delicate Coulomb electrometer was
still without charge.
1309. As A was positive, B and
C were of course negative; but as the specific inductive
capacity of shell-lac is about twice that of air
(1270.), it was expected that when the lac was
introduced between A and B, A would induce more towards
B than towards C; that therefore B would become more
negative than before towards A, and consequently, because
of its insulated condition, be positive externally,
as at its back or at the gold leaves; whilst C would
be less negative towards A, and therefore negative
outwards or at the gold leaves. This was found
to be the case; for on whichever side of A the shell-lac
was introduced the external plate at that side was
positive, and the external plate on the other side
negative towards each other, and also to uninsulated
external bodies.
1310. On employing a plate of
sulphur instead of shell-lac, the same results
were obtained; consistent with the conclusions drawn
regarding the high specific inductive capacity of
that body already given (1276.).
1311. These effects of specific
inductive capacity can be exalted in various ways,
and it is this capability which makes the great value
of the apparatus. Thus I introduced the shell-lac
between A and B, and then for a moment connected B
and C, uninsulated them, and finally left them in the
insulated state; the gold leaves were of course hanging
parallel to each other. On removing the shell-lac
the gold leaves attracted each other; on introducing
the shell-lac between A and C this attraction
was increased, (as had been anticipated from
theory,) and the leaves came together, though not
more than four inches long, and hanging three inches
apart.
1312. By simply bringing the
gold leaves nearer to each other I was able to show
the difference of specific inductive capacity when
only thin plates of shell-lac were used, the
rest of the dielectric space being filled with air.
By bringing B and C nearer to A another great increase
of sensibility was made. By enlarging the size
of the plates still further power was gained.
By diminishing the extent of the wires, &c. connected
with the gold leaves, another improvement resulted.
So that in fact the gold leaves became, in this manner,
as delicate a test of specific inductive action
as they are, in Bennet’s and Singer’s electrometers,
of ordinary electrical charge.
1313. It is evident that by making
the three plates the sides of cells, with proper precautions
as regards insulation, &c., this apparatus may be
used in the examination of gases, with far more effect
than the former apparatus (1187. 1290), and may, perhaps,
bring out differences which have as yet escaped me
(1292. 1293.)
1314. It is also evident that
two metal plates are quite sufficient to form the
instrument; the state of the single inducteous plate
when the dielectric is changed, being examined either
by bringing a body excited in a known manner towards
its gold leaves, or, what I think will be better,
employing a carrier ball in place of the leaf, and
examining that ball by the Coulomb electrometer (1180.).
The inductive and inducteous surfaces may even be
balls; the latter being itself the carrier ball of
the Coulomb’s electrometer (1181. 1229.).
1315. To increase the effect,
a small condenser may be used with great advantage.
Thus if, when two inducteous plates are used, a little
condenser were put in the place of the gold leaves,
I have no doubt the three principal plates might be
reduced to an inch or even half an inch in diameter.
Even the gold leaves act to each other for the time
as the plates of a condenser. If only two plates
were used, by the proper application of the condenser
the same reduction might take place. This expectation
is fully justified by an effect already observed and
described (1229.).
1316. In that case the application
of the instrument to very extensive research is evident.
Comparatively small masses of dielectrics could be
examined, as diamonds and crystals. An expectation,
that the specific inductive capacity of crystals will
vary in different directions, according as the lines
of inductive force (1304.) are parallel to, or in other
positions in relation to the axes of the crystals,
can be tested: I purpose that these and many
other thoughts which arise respecting specific inductive
action and the polarity of the particles of dielectric
matter, shall be put to the proof as soon as I can
find time.
Refer for this investigation to 1680-1698.—De.
1317. Hoping that this apparatus
will form an instrument of considerable use, I beg
to propose for it (at the suggestion of a friend) the
name of Differential Inductometer.
Royal Institution, March 29, 1838.